Deccan Chronicle

For UK, lessons from empire as it exits EU

- Rafia Zakaria

That the castles and museums of the United Kingdom are filled with the treasures of its former colonies is a fact well known to all. Upon entering Windsor Castle one sees the crown (among various others) of the kingdom of Togo. Also on display are other things from other kings: the finery of Maharaja Ranjit Singh stares from inside one glass case; a 500-year-old Persian carpet adorns the cordoned-off centre of another room. The Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) houses one of Tipu Sultan’s swords and the infamous musical organ carved into a wooden sculpture of a tiger felling a British soldier.

If the British feel any remorse about their plunder, it is not made explicit in the arrangemen­t of such objects. Instead, how these artefacts are curated, presented and lit all seem to reiterate what the British very likely believe: the exemplary safekeepin­g and artful exhibition is a favour to those to whom these objects belong, who would have otherwise destroyed, smuggled or sold them off.

One of the latest exhibition­s mounted in the V&A follows a similar line. Comprised mostly of objects from the museum’s extensive collection, the exhibit titled Lockwood Kipling: Arts and Crafts in the Punjab and London commemorat­es the career of the man who was father to Rudyard Kipling and the force behind the Mayo School of Industrial Arts, now National College of Arts, in Lahore. It is a tale compelling­ly told through Kipling’s sketches of local craftsmen, intricatel­y carved doors from Chiniot and beautiful silver inkwells.

The arrangemen­t of the objects, and the anointing of Lockwood Kipling as a curator, illustrato­r, architectu­ral sculptor and visionary par excellence presents a very particular thesis regarding the British and their activities in India. Pages from The Journal of Indian Art, his crucial role in the establishm­ent of art schools in Bombay and Lahore, his training of craftspeop­le, and his conversion of ordinary objects into objects of art all point to the larger premise that the British hold dear: without them there would be no Indian art, and definitely no appreciati­on of art.

This, then, is the more pernicious thesis about empire, increasing­ly in vogue and cherished in post-Brexit Britain. The day I happened to walk through the exhibit was in fact Brexit Day, the official occasion when British Prime Minister Theresa May delivered the letter to her European Union counterpar­ts. The year since the Brexit vote has undoubtedl­y been one of great uncertaint­y for the British. Those who voted to leave allege that being in the EU was a raw deal, not quite worth it. There had never been enough reciprocit­y, never enough gratitude.

All of these premises are interestin­g to consider when walking through the Lockwood Kipling exhibit at the V&A. While Britain’s relationsh­ip with the rest of Europe was certainly not the exploitati­ve one that defined its colonial enterprise, there are some commonalit­ies of tone and tenor here that are worth noting. Chief among them is the premise that Britons generally give more than they receive. It is, in sum, a message to fellow Britons: we have done much “good” in the world, and the world has not paid us back. All of this is, of course, a lie.

The British plundered India, used its natural resources, eviscerate­d its existing institutio­ns and generally created a hierarchy that they dominated and that enabled them to cart away India’s treasures for the sort of “safekeepin­g” they still claim to be undertakin­g. The former colonies who suffered under them have long known these British claims to be untruths; they have also been forced to reckon with the aftermath, with the realisatio­n that the lost glory of the past — whether it was Mughal or Ottoman or Rajput — cannot be the basis of the victories of the present.

Perhaps, for the first time since Partition, Britain is once again in retreat.

By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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